According to my son's birth certificate, I became a father in 2010. But becoming an actual parent took longer. In fact, I think it took until last week.
When imagining what having kids will be like, we all have similar daydreams. Most of them focus on big moments: choosing a name, putting together a crib, going through labor, changing diapers, playing catch, taking off the training wheels, the first day of school, etc.
Here are five developments that signaled my graduation from baby-toter to parent extraordinaire!
1. Panic Gluttony
Babies get fevers and it ain't a big deal. It happens. To be a dick about it: It's a sign that his body is learning to heal itself, blah blah blah.
But the fact is, critical situations aside, babies have fevers and then they don't. More often than not, they stay below the danger zone and they're gone the next day. But when your first kid gets his first fever?
It's panic time. And it's that panic -- the all-consuming worry for this child that is suddenly the most important thing in your life, and by a MILE -- that is the big deal. Because once you feel that panic for the first time, no matter if it's about a fever or crying it out or the fact that he hasn't shit in a few days or he might be allergic to eggs, it never leaves you. Panicking IS parenting.
2. The Brag
We all do it. When you have a child, that child becomes such a large part of your life -- the focus of it, really -- that it's totally natural to watch with pride as he grows and develops and learns.
And even if you've entered parenthood having vowed not to be one of those parents who constantly talks up their kid, odds are you'll become one anyway, and you'll find yourself talking up the strangest things.
Bragging about your kids is a natural part of being a parent and that first time you see someone's eyes glaze over as you show them another adorable pic of your beautiful child is when you'll know you've crossed over to the other side.
3. The Judge
Yup. Even me. Even despite writing a blog that frequently rails against those Other Parents who are constantly judging other parents' parenting techniques, I've found myself doing it. Despite the fact that every child is different, every parent is different and every situation is different, and there is NO SUCH THING as a parenting expert, it's human nature to notice what someone else is doing and feel like your way is better.
None of us knows what we're doing, but that doesn't stop us from acting like we know better. After a year or two, you start to feel like your experience, no matter how limited, gives you some kind of insight into the "right way" to do things. Once you start to believe you have the answers? You're becoming a parent. (Once you realize you don't? You're becoming a good parent.)
4. Shit Happens
Shortly after he was born, Mom and Buried and I took our son to a friend's house for New Year's Eve. At some point during increasingly drunken discussions about Dick Clark's face and Fleshlights (true story), I had to change my kid's diaper.
During the process, one I had already undertaken countless times in the previous four months or so, I got some shit on my thumb. Human shit. It had happened before (and not just on my thumb!); tweren't no thang. So, I soldiered on and finished the job, wiping the human waste from my hands, grabbing another beer and promptly forgetting about it. When you stop giving a shit about shit, you're becoming a parent.
5. "Because I Said So!"
This is what did it for me. This is when I knew I had earned my Parenting Stripes. I've accepted panic as my natural state. I've been as guilty as the next person of boasting about my son's ability to hit a baseball or use the potty or spell his name.
I've walked a Target and shaken my head more times than I can count after witnessing some clueless dad's inferior attempt to discipline his kid, and
I'm nonplussed by the filth. But it wasn't until I became MY PARENTS that I realized I'd become A parent. It happened last week when I told my son to clean up his LEGOs and he asked me why. Without thinking, I said the magic words.
Only parents say stuff like, "Because I said so!" The circle is now complete. Before today, I was just a guy with a kid. To quote Furious Stylez, "Any fool with a dick can make a baby, it takes a crushed soul to say 'Because I said so.'"
A child's development chugs along step-by-step as a series of "firsts," every one of which is a new milestone. But parenting doesn't develop so much as accumulate.
It wasn't the first diaper change that made me a dad, it was the 50th. It wasn't weathering that first tantrum that earned me my stripes, it's weathering the 800th, that's happening right now, the one I'm ignoring as I do 10 different things. Parenting is a war of attrition. As your child grows up, you are slowly worn down.
In that way, becoming a parent is less like earning a degree and more like erecting a prison around your life. If you're lucky, sometime around college, you get parole.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Manchester United lose 3-0 at home to Bournemouth yet again
2 minutes -
CHAN 2024Q: ‘It’s still an open game’ – Didi on Ghana’s draw with Nigeria
10 minutes -
CHAN 2024Q: Ghana’s Black Galaxies held by Nigeria in first-leg tie
1 hour -
Dr Nduom hopeful defunct GN bank will be restored under Mahama administration
2 hours -
Bridget Bonnie celebrates NDC Victory, champions hope for women and youth
2 hours -
Shamima Muslim urges youth to lead Ghana’s renewal at 18Plus4NDC anniversary
3 hours -
Akufo-Addo condemns post-election violence, blames NDC
3 hours -
DAMC, Free Food Company, to distribute 10,000 packs of food to street kids
4 hours -
Kwame Boafo Akuffo: Court ruling on re-collation flawed
5 hours -
Samuel Yaw Adusei: The strategist behind NDC’s electoral security in Ashanti region
5 hours -
I’m confident posterity will judge my performance well – Akufo-Addo
5 hours -
Syria’s minorities seek security as country charts new future
5 hours -
Prof. Nana Aba Appiah Amfo re-appointed as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana
6 hours -
German police probe market attack security and warnings
6 hours -
Grief and anger in Magdeburg after Christmas market attack
6 hours